Showing posts with label Law. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Law. Show all posts

13.6.13

Jamie Murray: Deleuze & Guattari Emergent Law - Routledge-Cavendish , Uk, 21 April 2013



Deleuze & Guattari: Emergent Law is an exposition and development of Deleuze & Guattari's legal theory. Although there has been considerable interest in Deleuze & Guattari in critical legal studies, as well as considerable interest in legality in Deleuze & Guattari studies, this is the first book to focus exclusively on Deleuze & Guattari and law. Situating Deleuze & Guattari's engagement with social organisation and legality in the context of their theory of 'abstract machines' and 'intensive assemblages', J
Jamie Murray presents their theory of law as that of a two-fold conception of, first, a transcendent molar law and, second, an immanent molecular emergent law. Transcendent molar legality is the traditional object of legal theory. And, as explicated here, immanent molecular emergent law is the novel juridical object that Deleuze & Guattari identify. Developing this conception,Deleuze & Guattari: Emergent Law draws out its implications for current and for future legal theory; arguing that it provides the basis for a new jurisprudence capable of creating new concepts of legality.
Introduction 1.Professor Challenger’s Lecture on the Earth 2. To Engender Thinking in Thought 3. Workshop on Social Machines and Social Assemblages With Caprica Six (Eternal Return) 4. Four Laws: From Ecumenon to Planomenon 5.Emergent Law: Schizo Lawyers and Vagabond Lawyers 6. A Legality for a New Earth: Ecology of Virtual and Intensive Earth
Dr Jamie Murray is Senior Lecturer in Law at Liverpool John Moores University specialising in Equity & Trusts Law. His research interests are Deleuze & Guattari, Complexity Theory, and Equity & Trusts Law

18.2.12

Giorgio Agamben: Power, Law and the Uses of Criticism Power, Law and the Uses of Criticism By Thanos Zartaloudis (Routledge, Uk, July 2011)



Giorgio Agamben: Power, Law and the Uses of Criticism

Power, Law and the Uses of Criticism

By Thanos Zartaloudis


Giorgio Agamben: Power, Law and the Uses of Criticism is a thorough engagement with the thought of the influential Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben. It explores Agamben’s work on language, ontology, power, law and criticism from the 1970s to his most recent publications.
Introducing Agamben's work to a readership in legal theory, as well as in the humanities and social sciences more generally, Thanos Zartaloudis argues that an adequate understanding of Agamben's Homo Sacer project requires an attention to his earlier philosophical writings on language, ontology, power and time. It is through this attentive and creative analysis of Agamben's work that Zartaloudis here presents a rethinking of the ideas of justice and criticism.
Contents: 1. Sacred Foundations: Mythologemes of Law and Power 2. From Transcendental Sovereignty to Neo-Governmentality: The Oikonomia of Power 3. Secular Sovereignty: A Gigantomachy Over a Void 4. The Biopolitical Nomos of Insignificant Lives 5. The Sacrament of Power and the Sacrament of Language 6. The Experience of Potentiality 7. The Idea of Justice



Thanos Zartaloudis researches and teaches at the School of Law, Birkbeck College of the University of London.


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